Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR. TA LMAG E
Th« Emdnont Divine's Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: Onr Nation'* Needs—Wo Should
Show More Gratitude to God For His
Blessings — Our Lack of Appreciation
of the Lord’s Bounty.
[Copyright iwiw.i
Washington, I). C. — Dr. Talmage
preaches a discourse of Christian patriot¬
ism, and shows the resources of our coun¬
try. and predicts the time when all the
world will have the same blessings. His
two texts arc, Revelations xxi, 13. "On
the south three gates;” Realm cxlvii, 20,
“He hath not dealt so with any nation.”
Among the greatest needs of our* coun¬
try is more gratitude to God for Hie un¬
paralleled prosperity bestowed upon us.
One of my texts calls us to international
somparison. What nation on all the plan¬
et has of late had such enlargement of
commercial opportunity as is now opening
before this nation? Cuba and 1’orto Rico
and the Philippine Islands through brought into
close contact with us, and steam¬
ship subsidy and Nicaragua canal, which
will surely be afforded by Congress, all the
republics of Routh America will be brought
into most active trade with the United
States. “On the south three gates.”
While our next-door neighbors, the south¬
ern republics and neighboring colonies,
imported from Eurooean countries 3000
miles away $675,000,000 wortli of goods in
a year, only $126,000,000 worth went from
1 he United States-$123,000,000 out of $675,
000,000, only one-fifth of the trade ours,
European and leaving nations the taking thumb.^ the four Now ^fingers all
us poor is nothing
this is to be changed. There the isl¬
hut a comparative ferry between
ands which have recently come under our
protection, and only a ferry between us
and Bolivia. Peru, Paraguay, Uruguay,
Venezuela, Salvador, Nicaragua, Colom¬
bia, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Brazil, _ while
there are raging seas and long voyages be¬
tween them and Europe. By the mandate
of the United States $11 that will he
changed through new facilities of transpor¬
tation. The Hispano-Ameriean fail in congress, its
just closed at Madrid, will at¬
tempt to divert all the trade of South
America from us to Europe.
In anticination of what is sure to come
T nail on the front door of this nation an
advertisement:
Wanted—One hundred thousand men
to build railroads through South America
and the islands of the sea under our pro¬
tection.
Wanted—A thousand telegraph opera¬
tors.
Wanted—One hundred million dollars
worth of dry goods from the great 'cities
of the United States.
Wanted—All the clocks you can make at
New Haven, and all the brains you can
spare from Boston, and all the hells you
can mold at Troy, and all the McCormick
reapers you fashion at Chicago, and all the
hams you can turn out at Cincinnati, and
all the railroad iron -you can send from
Pittsburg, and all the statesmen that you
.an spare from Washington. wanted by
Wanted — Right away, rail train, new
and swifter steamers, wanted by
lawyers to plead our causes. sick.
Wanted—Doctors to oure our
Wanted—Ministers to eyangelize our
papulation. Wanted—Professors establish
to our
universities.
“On the three south gates!” and Yea, all a
thousand gates! South America
•ihe islands of the sea approximate domain, and are
rightfully our commercial
the Congress of the United States will see
to it that we get what belongs to us.
And then tides of travel will be some¬
what diverted from Europe to our islands
at the south and to the land of the Az¬
tecs. Much of the $125,000,000 yearly ex¬
pended by Americans in Europe will be
expended in southern exploration, in look¬
ing at some of the ruins of the forty-seven
-aifie^ which Stephens found only a little
way apart, and in walking through the
great doorways and over the miracles of
mosaic and along by the monumental glo¬
ries of another civilization, and ancient
America will with cold lips of stone kiss
tie warm lips of modern America, Popocatepetl and to
hire seen the Andes and
w3l be deemed as important as to have And
seen the Alpine and Balkan ranges.
there will be fewer people spoiled less by of for¬ the
eign travel and in our midst
poor and nauseating imitation of the French
tbrug and the intentional hesitancy of a
hV* in less foreign swell. The fact is that
s»py are made vain by European travel,
though sensible when they embarked,
they return with a collar and a cravat and
a ihoe and a coat and a pronunciation institutions and and
a sontempt for American
the bend of the elbow that make one be
HeYe in evolution backward from man to
ape. Of the many thousands who now cross
the sea annually thousands will on pleasure
and business visit southern lands, and so
thurists and merchants and scientists and
capitalists will all help in this national de
v«J6pment. “On the south three gates."
Atnd what other nation has such openings
fur commercial enlargement as ours?
Again, in this international comparison
notice the happy condition of our country
as compared with most countries. Rus¬
sia under the shadow of the dreadful ill¬
ness of her great and good emperor, who
now more than any man in all the world
represents “peace on earth, good the will to
men,” and whose empress, near most
solemn hour that ever comes to a wom¬
an’s soul, is anxious for him to whom she
Has given hand and heart, not for political
reasons, but through old-fashioned love
such as blesses our humbler dwellings; which
India, under the agonies of a famine
though somewhat lifted has filled hun¬
dreds of thousands of graves and thrown
millions into orphanage; Austria only
waiting for her genial Francis Joseph to
die so as to let Hungary rise in rebellion
and make the palace of Vienna quake with
insurrection; Spain in Carlist revolution
and pauperized as seldom any nation has
been her pauperized; king's Italy under China the horrors shud¬
of assassination;
dering with a fear of dismemberment, her
capital in possession the of foreign nations.
After a review of conditiors in other
finds can you find a more appropriate ut¬
terance in regard to our country than the
■exclamation of the text, "He hath not
dealt so with any nation?”
•veSts Compare America the autumnal this report and the of har- har¬
m year
vests abroad. Last summer I crossed the
■continent of Europe twice, and I saw no
■each harvests as are spoken o' in this
■statement. Hear it, all you men and
women who want everybody to have
enough that to the eat and wear. I have to tell
you corn crop of our country
this year is one of the four largest
•notion crops on record, 2,105,000,000 bushels. The
times,' crop, will though smaller than at
some bigger prices, and on that account planters bring
so cotton of
the South are prosperous. The wheat
fields have provided bread dough find to
spare. The potato crop one of the five
largest crops on record, 211,000,000 bush¬
els. Twenty-two million two hundred
thousand swine slain, and yet so many
hogs left?
But now I give you the comparative ex¬
ports and imports, which tell the story of
national prosperity as nothing else can.
Excess of exports over imports, $544,400,
000. Now, let all pessimists hide them¬
selves in the dens and caves of the earth,
wnile all grateful souls fill the churches
with doxology. Notice also that while
ether countries rre at their wits’ ends as
to their finance* this nation has money to
lend. “Germany, we are «Ud to see you
in Wall street. If you must borrow money
we have it all ready. How much will you
have? Russia, we also Welcome you into
our money markets. Give us good collat¬ please
eral. Meanwhile, Denmark. will you
accept our offer of $3,000,000 for the island
of Rt. Thomas?” Mv hearers, there is no
nation on earth with such healthy condi¬
tion of finances. We wickedly waste an
awful amount of money in this country,
but some one has said it is easier to man¬
age a surplus than a deficit.
Besides all this, not a disturbance from
Rt. Lawrence River to Key West or from,
Highlands of New Jersey to Golden Horn
of the Pacific. Rcctional controversies,
ended. The North and South brought
into complete accord by the the Spanish war, the
which put the Lees and Grants on
same side, Vermonters and Georgians Civil in
the same brigade. And since our
War we are all mixed up. Southern men
have married Northern wives, and North
evn men have married Southern wives,
and your children are half Mississippian
and half New Englander, and to make an¬
other division between the North and the
Routli possible voit would have to do with
your child as Rolomon proposed with the
child brought before him for judgment
divide it with the sword, giving half to
the North and half to the South. No;
there is nothing so hard to split sb a cra¬
dle. In other lands there is compulsory
marriage of roval families, some bright
princess compelled to marry some disa¬
greeable foreign diznitary in order to keep
the balance of political power in Europe,
the ill-matched pair which fightine would have out on been a
small scale that
an international contest, sometimes the
husband having the balance of power and
sometimes the wife.
If there is anything that stirs my ad¬
miration it is a man without any educa¬
tion himself sending his sons to college,
and without any opportunity for luxury
himself resolved that,(hough lie shall have
it hard a’ e days of his life his children
shall he V ood start.
AndQL jCY?Vou that though commercial some of our
people may have great strug¬
gles there is going to be a great opening
for their sons and daughters as they come
on to take their places in the world.
Continuing this international comparison
I have to say to you that we have a bet¬
ter climate than is to he found in any
other nation. We do not suffer from any¬
thing like the Scotch mists or the English
fogs or the Russian ice blasts or the ty¬
phus of Southern Europe or the Asiatic
cholera. Epidemics in America are ex¬
ceptional. very exceptional. Plenty of
wood and eoal to make a roaring fire mid¬
winter. Easy access to seabeach or mount¬
ain top when the ardors of summer come
down, Michigan wheat for the bread,
Long Island corn for the meal, Carolina
rice for the qtiec i of puddings, Louisiana
sugar to sweeten our beverages, Georgia
cotton to lcpep i s warm, in our hand all
products and all climates. Are your nerves
weak? Go north. Is your throat delicate?
Go south. Do you feel crowded and want
more room? Go west.
I declare it, this is the best country in
all the world to live in. How do I know
it? I have 650,000 new reasons for saving
it; 650.000 people in one year came from
the other side of the Atlantic to live in
America, and they came because it is the
very best country to live in.
While making this international com¬
parison let us lozik forward to the time
which will surely come when all nations
will have as great advantages as the our whole own.
As surely as the Bible is true
earth is to be gardenized and set free.
Even the climates will change and the
heats be cooled and the frigidity warmed.
Many years ago in this city I gazed upon
a scene which for calamity and grandeur the
one seldom sees equalled. I mean
burning of the Smithsonian Institution.
It was the pride of our country. In it art
had gathered rarest specimens front ail
lands and countries.
It was one of those buildings which
seize you with enchantment as you enter
and ail the rest of y> ur life holds you
with a charm. I happened to see the first
glow of the fires which on that cold day
looked out from the windows of the costly
pile. I saw the angry elements roar and
rave. The shout of affrighted workman seemed
and the assault of fire engines only
to madden the rage of the monsters that
rose up to devour all that came within
reach of their chain.
Up along the walls and through the
doors were pushed hands that snatched
down all they could reach and hurled it
into the abyss of flame beneath. The win¬
dows of the tower would light up for a
minute with a wild glare and then darken,
though fiends with streaming lockB of
fire had come out to gaze on in and laughing
mockery of all human attempts then
sunk again into their native darkness.
The roofs began here and there to blos¬
som in wreaths and vines of flame. Up
and down the pillars ran serpents of fire.
Out from the windows great arms and
fingers of flames were extended, as deliver¬ though
destroyed spirits were begging for
ance. The tower put on a coronet of flame
and staggered and fell, the sparks flying,
the firemen escaping, the terror accumulat¬
ing.
Books, maps, rare correspondence, auto¬
graphs oi kings, costly diagrams burned to
cinder or scattered tor many a rood upon
the wild wind to be picked up by the ex¬
cited multitude. Oh, it seemed like soma
great funeral pile in which the wealth and
glory of our land had leaped to burn with
its consuming treasures. The heavens
were blackened with whirlwinds of smoke,
through which shot the long red shafts of
calamity. waved its fiery
Destruction banner from
the remaining towers, and in the thunder
of billowing falling beams and heard in the the roaring of surge
of fire I spirits ruin
and desolation and woe clapping their
hands and shouting, “Aha! aha!”
( I turned and looked upon the white
dome of yonder capitol, which rose
through the frosty air as imposing as
though all the white marble of the earth
had come to resurrection and stood be¬
fore us, reminding one of the great white
throne of heaven. There it stood, un¬
moved by the terrors which that day had
been kindled before it. No tremor in its
majestic columns, no flush of excitement
in its veins of marble. Column and capital world
and dome built to endure until the
itself shatters in the convulsions of the
last earthquake, Oh, what a contrast be¬
tween the smoking ruin on the one hand
and that gorgeous white dream of archi¬
tecture on the other! Well, the day speeds
on when the grandest achievement of man
will be consumed and the world will blaze.
Down will go galleries of art and thrones
of royalty and the hurricane of God’s
power will scatter even the ashes of con
sumed greatness and glory. Not one tower
left, not one city uneonsumed, not one
scene of grandeur to relieve the desola¬
tion. Forests dismasted, seas annihilated. licked up,
continents sunk, hemispheres
Oh, the roar and thundering crash of that
last conflagration! But from that ruin
of a blazing earth we shall look up to see
the temple of liberty and justice rising and
through the ages, white and pure
grand, unsearred and unshaken. Founded
on the eternal rock and swelling into
domes of infinitude and glory in which the
hallcluliahs of heaven have their reverber¬
ation. No flame of human hate shall
blacken its walls. No thunder of infernal
wrath shall rock its foundations. By the
upheld read it torches column of burning and worlds architrave we shall and
on
throne of eternal dominion. "Heaven and
earth shall pass away, but truth and lib¬
erty and justice shall never pass away.”
Makes Hair
Grow
Perhaps your mother had
thin hair, but that is no reason
why you must go through life
with half-starved hair. If you
want long, thick hair, feed it.
Feed it with Ayer’s Hair Vigor,
the only genuine hair food you
can buy.
Your hair will grow thick
and long, and will be soft and
glossy.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor always
restores color to gray hair; it
keeps the scalp clean and
healthy, and stops falling of
the hair.
One dollar a bottle.
If your druggist cannot supply you, send
us $i.oo and we will express a bottle to you,
all charges prepaid, lie sure and give us
your nearest express office.
J. C. AviOt Co., Cowell, Mass.
Send for our beautiful illustrated book on
The Hair. Free.
LIBBY’S
6 PlatesoiSoap, 10c.
a io-ct. can of Libliy’s Premier
SOUP makes six plates of the best
soup you ever tasted.
If there was a way to make soup
better, wc would learn it — but
there isn’t.
Oxtail MuHaoatawny
Turtle Mock Turtle
Chicken Chicken Gumbo
Tomato Vegetable
Ready-Made Soups.
One can will make you a convert.
% Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago
- Write a postal for onr free book, “How to
V. Make Good Tliines to Eat.”
Meiltioil this Paper !n wri '^wtu'na A L 1 ' 361 ' 8 ' i
-------- —- :
DEVELOPING THE DAIRY CALF.
The calf destined for the dairy
should never be fed a ration which will
make it put on fat. If the llesh-grow- :
ing habit is acquired by the young
growing animal, it is retained after- !
ward and the animal Is injured for
dairy purposes. F. W. Hodson, former
superintendent of the Ontario Farmers’
Institutes, recommends to remove the
calf from its dam as soon as dropped
and to put in a separate pen, where it
must be thoroughly rubbed dry with
a cloth. Some prefer to let the cow
clean the calf, but he cons'uers it
doubtful if any good is served there¬
by, and in the case of a heifer with her
first calf, the longer the calf is left
with her the more troublesome She is j
likely to be, especially as regat'ds hold¬
ing up her milk.
Teaching the ca'f to drink !s not a
troublesome process when it is remov¬
ed early from the dam. Always give
the calf the colostrum, or first milEt an'd
let It have the dam’s milk for a week.
Feed frequently and in small quanti¬
ties, never more than two quarts per
feed. Feed the milk at S temperature
of from DO to 93 degrees. At the end
of the week, begin to substitute
skim-millc. There Is no better substi¬
tute for the butter fat removed iu
skimming the milk than flaxseed or
linseed meal. Take a quart of flax- j
seed, soak for five or six hours In six
or eight quarts of water and boil for
an hour. Give half a teacupful oT this
jelly at each feed and Increase as the
calf grows.
An English dairy farmer gives the
fallowing as his method of feeding
calves: He makes a porridge of four j
quarts of corn m»at, two quarts of
ground buckwheat, four quarts of
wheat bran and two handfuls of lin
seed meal. Each calf receives a heap¬
ing tablespoonful for each ineAl, which
Is m*de Into a porridge with water and
added to one quart of sweet milk. In
which a pinch of salt Is put The grain
Is gradually increased each week. As
regards this ration, it may be said that
skim-milk could well be substituted as
more economical Ilian new milk, and
also that the feeding of corn meal and
ground buckwheat would have a ten¬
dency to Induce flesh-forming habits lu
the animal.— American Agriculturist.
There are 4,110 known and cultivated
varieties of flowers in Europe, only 400
of which have any odor, nearly fifty
of which may be classed as “disagree¬
able” *
To Cur** it Cold in One I>ay.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money If It fails to cure,
E. W. Grove's signature is on each box, 23c.
Diffusion of Culture.
“The Boston glti I was engaged to picked me
up on grammar before a week passed over our
heads.” corrected
“You got off easy. The one I knew
my English while I was proposing to her.’
eV e iri« IThompian’s Eye Water
"La Creole Will Restore those Gray hairs
La Creole Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dres^i ng and Restorer. Price $1-00.
SLOT MACHINES FOR MARBLES.
Ingenious Yankee Boy* Who Are Doing*
Good Trade.
Even the schoolroom hns been In¬
vaded by the slot machine. An In¬
genious contrivance arranged on the
principle of a slot machine has been
the means within the last two weeks
of creating a corner on marbles in cer¬
tain St. Joseph schools. The heavy
holders of that “commodity” are the
owners of the marble slot machines.
This device Is one that any boy with
the aid of a few tools can construct.
One manner of construction is this: A
cigar box, from which the lid has been
removed, is nailed to an inch board cut
to the size of the box. The box is
then divided into two compartments
by a thin partition made of the lid,
through which the slot machine maker
has bored three holes large enough to
admit a marble of ordinary size. In
one of these compartments Is arranged
a triangle of shingle nails, driven at
even distances from each other, and
so placed that a marble will roll
through between them. Another open¬
ing Is made in the top of the cigar
box, through which the marble is
dropped.
The nails are so arranged that the
marble strikes one when It Is dropped
into the upper slot. The force of con
tact throws It up against the next nail,
and thus It travels through the triangle
of nails in a sinuous course toward
the partition containing the three
holes. If it drops through the centre
hole the boy who Is playing the aa
chine wins. His own marble is re¬
turned to him and he receives another
in addition. If it drops through either
of the other holes he loses, and the
slot machine keeps the marble. As the
whole contrivance is in plain sight of
the boy who plays the machine, there
Is no opportunity for juggling the mar
bles in their course. The chances to
win or- lose are, apparently, about
even. The slot machine has proven
immensely popular at many of the
schools, and some of the teachers have
forbidden its use on the ground that
it teaches boys gambling— St Joseph
(Mo.; News.
HARDY ORANGES.
Tbe department of agriculture is try¬
ing to produce an orange which will
endure frost, by crossing our native
orange with the hardy trifoliate orange
of Japan. They do not expect success
at the first trial, and may get a bitter
or heavily seeded fruit, but from even
such fruit it may be possible to pro
^ uce better and still retain the hardi
ness. It is well worth the trial.
The Twentieth Century,
andth^^nth is’a
thing of the past. It will, however, be
known as the century of invention and dis
°°very, among some of the greatest of
these, we can truthfully mention Hostetter s
.Stomach Bitters, the celebrated remedy for
all ailments arising from a weak or dis¬
ordered stomach, such as dyspepsia, indi¬
gestion, iousness. flatulency, constipation and bil¬
Great Invention.
“The Tammany machine la a great labor
saving Invention.”
‘Yes, Indeed! It saves many a heeler from
having to go to work.”—Puck.
Tlie Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of GROVB’s Tasteless
t hii.l TONIC. It Is simply iron and quinine in
* lasielees form. No cure—no pay. Price 3Jc.
Utilization of the Sensational.
„ „ ,
7 a * y '
“How do you know ?”
“She read* only novels that will make her
hair curl.”
_
Petsam Fadeless Die produces the
fastest and brightest colors of any known dye
stuff. Bold by all druggists.
Hi* Annual Rescue.
“My wife asserts that she saves my llfo at
5,e '* r -”
“sn^won’t let me go hunting.”
Best For the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headaohe to a
cancer, yeu will never gst well until your
bowels are put right. Casoabkt* help
nature, oure you without a gripe or pain,
produce easy natural movements, cost yon
just 10 cents to start getting your health
back. Oascarets Dandy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab¬
let has O.O.O. stamped on U. Beware of
Imitations._
T) # Pr „ gnre _
j£ ftte — r)Ail Daniels must be hard pressed
for a beau to take up with Charlie Crowders.
Mate—Rather she Is hard pressed by a beau
tu taking up with him.
Indigestion Is a bad companion, Get
rid of it by chewing a bar of Adams' Pep¬
sin Tutti Frutti after each meal.
Getting Even.
“Miss Bunk avenged herself on me for neg¬
lecting her invitation.”
‘•How?”
“She told everybody that I was old enough to
be a trifle forgetful.”
Plso's Cure Is the best medicine we ever need
for all affections of throat and lungs —Wh.
O. Kndslky, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, lfllO.
Deafness Cannot Be Cored
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is in¬
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper¬
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam¬
mation can be taken out and this tube restored
to its normal condition, hearing will be de¬
stroyed forevor. Nine case# out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an In¬
flamed condition of the raucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall'* Family Pills are the best.
Business Grasp.
“What! Fifty cents for putting in this load of
coal? You charged only 25 cents the last
time.”
“Yof’ra, but coal has riz.”
THE DISCOVERER OP
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
The Great Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills.
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No other medicine in the world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement.
No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles
or such hosts of grateful friends.
Do not be persuaded that any other medicine is just as good.
Any dealer who asks you to buy something else when you go into
his store purposely to buy Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
has no interest in your case. He is merely trying to sell you some¬
thing on which he can make a larger profit. He does not care
whether you get well or not, so long as he can make a little more
money out of your sickness. If he wished you well he would
without hesitation hand you the medicine you ask for, and which he
knows is the best woman’s medicine in the world.
Follow the record of this medicine, and remember that these
thousands of cures of women whose letters are constantly printed
in this paper were not brought about by “ something else,” but by
L&dia Em Pinkham’s Vegetable Gempmmd,
The Groat Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s His.
Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded
a hundred thousand times, for they get what they want — a cure.
Moral — Stick to the medicine that you know is Best.
When a medicine has been successful in restoring
to health more than a million women, you cannot
well say without trying it, “ I do not believe it will
help me.” If you are ill, do not hesitate*to get a bot¬
tle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at
once, and write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for
special advice. It is free and helpful.
The Official Vote.
All the states having completed and
declared the official count of the vote
for president, the exact result can now
be stated:
McKinley, Republican..... 7,217,677
Bryan, Democrat,......... 6,357,853
Wooley, Prohibitionist.... 207,368
Debs, Social Democrat.... 94,552
Barker, People’s.......... 50,188
Malloney, Socialist Labor.. 33,450
Scattering................ 6,211
Total 13,967,299
McKinley’s plurality...... 859,824
McKinley's majority 468,055
The total vote is thus shown to be
ODly 43,921 greater than in 1896. Mr.
McKinley’s vote is 112,898 more than
it was four years ago, and Mr. Bryan’s
vote is 145,072 less.
Mr. McKinley’s plurality is 256,310
greater than in 1896, and his majority
over all is 181,327 greater. The largest
plurality ever given to and presiden¬
tial candidate before was 762,991 to
Grant in 1892.—New York World.
Dr. Bull’s sSSSk
Cough substitutes. Syrup 5, Bull's Cough
Refuse Get Sr. Sirup.
SALESMEN WANTED TO
TRAVEL the
following states in 1901: Two in Ga., two In
Ala., one in S. C., one in Fla., two in Tenn.,
and two in La. Experience .not necessary, but
must be hustlers. Steady employment, with
good opportunities for promotion. Address,
giving reference.
THE C. A. BAINE TOBACCO CO.,
DANVILLE, VA.
furnish the genuine and
only HKIDELBERfi ALTERNAT¬
ING CUKUKNT RLXCTRIC SILTS
to any reader of this paper.
3 He AL^OSrWlHBwnJ^SS money i« advisee* Tory low
'STm?
with meet oil other treatment*. Care. wbe« ell otker oloe>
trie belle, appliances am! renedlee fall. CURE QUICK all CURE for
more than bailments. ONLY BURE for nervous
disease*. weaknesses and disorders. For complete
sealed confidential catalogue, eat thin ad oat ead mall (• ea.
SEARS, ROEBUCK A CO., Chicago.
sHroSy a
Nc
crop
can be
isa £3 grown
without
Potash.
Supply
enough Pot
' m* %v w ash and y° ur
r ofits be
large; without
Potash your
t crop will be
Our “scrubby.”
best adapted books, telling about composition of fertilizer*
for all crops, are free to ail farmers.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
G ONTRACTORS’ ®
BUILDERS’^
AND _MILL SUPPLIES.
Castings, Steel Beams, Columns Tanks, Towers, and Chan
nsl Bolts, Bods, Weights, Me.
Steel Wire and Manila Bops, Hoisting Engines
and Pumps, Jaoks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and
Rope Holats.
srcait Every Day. Make Quick Delivery.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY GO.
AUGUSTA, GA.
HDAD Hlk ft V9 CY I quick NEW relief DISCOVERT; and wont frive*
euree
ohms- Book of testimonial;* and 10 days’ treetmont
Free. Dr. H. H. GKEEN S SONS. Box E. Attest*. Oa.
Use CERTAIN COUGH CTO c= m s*
CHILL •If SU
CORN
25 crs."
Beat Cough Sy nip. Tastes Good. Use
in time. MBoldM by druggists.
-I-_- s-
275 <33,»